Study: Religion soothed evangelicals at start of COVID. Politics put them at risk.

From the start, religion has divided how Americans respond to COVID.

Photo by Caniceus/Pixabay/Creative Commons

(RNS) — Religion provided great comfort to evangelical Christians in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. But according to a study in the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, their politics made them less likely to see the virus as a threat.

Researchers Landon Schnabel of Cornell University and Scott Schieman of the University of Toronto looked at data from March 2020, soon after the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 coronavirus to be a global pandemic. Using the Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel, researchers surveyed more than 11,000 Americans online, asking a series of questions about their mental health as well as their views on the response to the pandemic.

Respondents were asked if they felt anxious or depressed, had trouble sleeping or were lonely, among other questions. They were also asked how they felt about how government officials and people in their community handled the pandemic on a scale from “overreacting to the outbreak” to “not taking the pandemic seriously enough.”


The survey also asked about religious affiliation and participation in religious services.

Evangelicals were the least distressed group during the early days of the pandemic, while Jews and secular Americans experienced the most distress. Americans who attended services regularly also reported less distress than those who attend less frequently. In general, religious Americans reported less distress than atheists.

The study also found evangelicals were less likely to adhere to COVID-19 restrictions.

Schnabel said that in the case of COVID-19, religion operated as a double-edge sword: Gathering together for worship services helped people cope with the stress of the pandemic, but gathering together also put people’s health at risk by helping allow COVID-19 to spread.

“This pandemic is the unique situation where the types of things that are good for your mental health might be risky for your physical health and the types of things that protect your physical health might be pretty dangerous for your mental health,” said Schnabel, an assistant professor of sociology at Cornell.


RELATED: Francis Collins ‘a bit’ frustrated with fellow evangelicals amid COVID vaccine push


Politics also played a key role in how evangelical Christians responded to the virus, even in the early days of COVID-19. Researchers found political affiliation mattered more than religion. They also found that politics helped determine how much distress Americans felt. When they controlled for political affiliation, evangelicals felt the same amount of distress as other religious groups.

“Whether restrictions on public activity have been worth the costs, by religious group” Graphic courtesy of Pew Research Center

“Whether restrictions on public activity have been worth the costs, by religious group” Graphic courtesy of Pew Research Center

Recent data from the Pew Research Center shows that evangelical Christians’ views of the pandemic continue to differ widely from the views of other Americans. Less than half (40%) of white evangelicals say that the public health benefits of COVID-19 restrictions have been worth the cost, according to Pew data. By contrast, 74% of Black Protestants, 63% of Catholics — including 70% of Hispanic Catholics — and 72% of unaffiliated Americans say the restrictions are worth the cost.


Overall, the survey reported that 62% of Americans say restrictions were worth the cost.

Pew also found only 57% of white evangelicals have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, the lowest rate among religious groups. Seventy percent of Black Protestants, 73% of white Protestants who are not evangelical, 82% of Catholics and 75% of the unaffiliated reported having at least one vaccine shot. Atheists (90%) and agnostics (84%) were vaccinated at a higher rate than Americans who identify as no religion in particular.

A study of Pennsylvania officials also found differences between how people of different faiths responded to COVID-19. The study, “Religion at the Frontline,” was published in Sociology of Religion and looked at initial responses from local government officials in charge of implementing public health responses to COVID.

Researchers lucked out in doing the study, said Gary Adler, an associate professor of sociology at Penn State.

They already had a study in the field that collected data about the religious affiliation of local officials in Pennsylvania (except for Philadelphia, due to privacy concerns) in the spring of 2020. When COVID-19 hit, researchers were able to go back with additional questions.

The study found that many of those officials followed health restrictions, including social distancing (72%) and mask-wearing (57%), and few were in a rush to reopen public meeting places. Only 18%, for example, supported immediately reopening churches in the early days of the pandemic.

Researchers did find, however, that mainline Protestant and Catholic officials were more likely to report always wearing a mask. Catholics were also more likely than unaffiliated officials to report always wearing masks and were more likely to want to delay reopening churches and other institutions than evangelicals.


Adler said that researchers also discovered two surprising findings.

“We find that religious attendance doesn’t really influence these things — so that is one finding,” he said. “The second finding was that across everything we looked at, religious nationalism did matter.”

Adler said local officials who expressed support for religious nationalism were less likely to wear masks or to want to delay reopening schools and other institutions.

Overall, however, Adler said he and other researchers came away impressed by the role that local officials played in the early days of the pandemic. Despite having limited information and mixed signals on how to respond — and dealing with a polarized public —many did their best to protect public health.

“One of the points we make is that local public health officials might have done better than people thought,” he said. “And local responses really matter.” 


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Ahead of the Trend is a collaborative effort between Religion News Service and the Association of Religion Data Archives made possible through the support of the John Templeton Foundation. See other Ahead of the Trend articles here.

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